As the chaos in the White House rages and threatens to consume Jeff Sessions, he professes to pay it no heed. “I want to do what the President wants me to do,” says Sessions, photographed by @philipmontgomery while boarding a government plane to Washington on March 15. "I do feel like we’re advancing the agenda that he believes in. And what’s good for me is it’s what I believe in too.” Like so many Republicans, the Attorney General has accommodated himself to Trump in ways that seem to contravene his principles. The day after TIME national political correspondent Molly Ball interviewed him, Sessions—acting on a recommendation from the inspector general and #FBI disciplinary officials—fired the FBI’s then-Deputy Director, Andrew McCabe, two days before he was set to retire. McCabe decried the act as politically motivated retaliation, an impression Trump bolstered with a set of gloating morning-after tweets. It was subsequently reported that McCabe had previously investigated Sessions over his Russian contacts. Sessions’ ultimate loyalty, he told Ball, is not to any man but to a principle. “Congress passes a law, judges follow the law, and nobody’s above the law, including the judges, and including the President,” he said. Yet every person of conviction makes a bargain by going to work for Trump: to wield the levers of power, to make changes you believe are for the better, you will have to make certain compromises. As many others can attest—and as Sessions may soon discover—following #Trump can lead you astray. Read the full cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by @philipmontgomery for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 3月30日 04時07分


As the chaos in the White House rages and threatens to consume Jeff Sessions, he professes to pay it no heed. “I want to do what the President wants me to do,” says Sessions, photographed by @philipmontgomery while boarding a government plane to Washington on March 15. "I do feel like we’re advancing the agenda that he believes in. And what’s good for me is it’s what I believe in too.” Like so many Republicans, the Attorney General has accommodated himself to Trump in ways that seem to contravene his principles. The day after TIME national political correspondent Molly Ball interviewed him, Sessions—acting on a recommendation from the inspector general and #FBI disciplinary officials—fired the FBI’s then-Deputy Director, Andrew McCabe, two days before he was set to retire. McCabe decried the act as politically motivated retaliation, an impression Trump bolstered with a set of gloating morning-after tweets. It was subsequently reported that McCabe had previously investigated Sessions over his Russian contacts. Sessions’ ultimate loyalty, he told Ball, is not to any man but to a principle. “Congress passes a law, judges follow the law, and nobody’s above the law, including the judges, and including the President,” he said. Yet every person of conviction makes a bargain by going to work for Trump: to wield the levers of power, to make changes you believe are for the better, you will have to make certain compromises. As many others can attest—and as Sessions may soon discover—following #Trump can lead you astray. Read the full cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by @philipmontgomery for TIME


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